Encephalopathy Traumatic Boxers

Encephalology, encelophagia is an outdated ancient Greek or polysemantic concept in Russian, meaning:

1. disease – nerve infection; 2. incoherent, meaningless muttering in a state of delirium.

Traumatic encephalopathy is a serious injury and damage to the brain resulting from mechanical head trauma of varying severity. May also develop with certain infectious diseases affecting the brain. One of the types of primary chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Symptoms: Memory loss and inability to remember new skills, Speech impairment, Behavioral and personality changes, Headache, Mood swings, Fatigue and drowsiness.

Encephalopathy in children occurs for the following reasons: * Infectious lesions of the central nervous system; * Traumatic brain injuries; * Brain tumors;

. The development of PA is based on chronic hypoxia and subsequent oxygen starvation of the nerve cells of the cortex, which leads to disruption of their energy processes, a persistent decrease in oxygen utilization, accumulation of metabolic products and damage to structures.

Martland syndrome (exercise encephalopathy or tropical encephalopathic paradoxical syndrome): * Often appears between 75 and 95 years of age; * A disease accompanied by gross changes in the brain, peripheral nervous system, specifically manifested by asthenia, dementia, frequent seizures, extrapyramidal symptoms, disorders of the autonomic nervous system; - irreversible and weakly reversible.

These causes are quite diverse and range from direct physical damage to the brain (



Traumatic boxer encephalopathy is an early age-related mental disorder and memory loss after severe traumatic brain injury in professional boxers. This is a dangerous disease that can develop due to regular strong blows to the head during combat.

The danger of this disease is that its development